Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Fall 2019 – Efremenko
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Efremenko will give a colloquium presentation about "What we can learn from CEvNS".
Astronomy Public Observing Night at Moundville
Moundville Archaeological Park 634 Mound Pkwy, Moundville, AL, United StatesOff-campus darker sight observations led by Prof. Emeritus Ron Buta and Prof. Bill Keel.
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Fall 2019 – Jamer
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Michelle Jamer will give a colloquium presentation about Creating Artificial Multiferroics Using Strain-Coupling Mechanisms.
Astronomy Public Observing Night
Gallalee Hall Rooftop Observatory Gallalee Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Preethi Nair will lead observations of the waxing Gibbous Moon.
HEP Seminar – Fall 2019 -Seto
Gallalee Hall Room 328Speaker: Prof. Osamu Seto (Hokkaido University) Title: Electric dipole moments and Higgs funnel annihilating dark matter in CPV MSSM Abstract: We investigate electric dipole moments (EDMs) in a CP-violating minimal supersymmetric standard model with the Bino-like neutralino dark matter (DM) annihilating through the heavy Higgs funnel. We show that CP-violating phases of a few degrees
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Fall 2019 – Cheng
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesProf. Dr. Ran Cheng will deliver a colloquium presentation on Antiferromagnetic Spintronics - A New Twist in Ultrafast Materials
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Bailin
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Jeremy Bailin will give a colloquium talk.
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Baldassare
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesDr. Vivienne Baldassare will give a colloquium on black holes in dwarf galaxies.
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Baldassare
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesSpeaker: Vivienne Baldassare Title: Hunting for the smallest supermassive black holes Abstract: All galaxies like our Milky Way contain a supermassive black hole at their center. These black holes weigh millions or billions of times the mass of our Sun, and despite their ubiquity, many open questions remain. How do supermassive black holes form? How
Physics & Astronomy Colloquium – Spring 2020 – Rawlins
227 Gallalee Hall 514 University Blvd., Tuscaloosa, AL, United StatesProf. Katherine Rawlins of the University of Alaska will give a colloquium on "Cosmic Rays: are they light or heavy?"